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fellupahill
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An interesting idea. What if matter doesn't exist independently from empty space. What if it is a part of space. What if quantum entanglement isn't that amazing because its not two separate particles acting instantaneously with each other, its all one "thing". (I just listened to penrose explain nonlocality. Is that what I am talking about now?) Dr. David Bohm says that our human nature is to individualize everything, and that leads to flaws in our understanding of the universe as a whole. What if the space-time continuum is more like an everything continuum. What if reality is like the "enfolded" part of a hologram. Before the laser makes it 3D, every piece of the picture is on every part of the piece. So what if every part of the universe contains the information for the entire universe. Bohm says the universe is only "a pale shadow of a deeper order" and that every cubic centimeter of empty space has more energy than the total energy of all the matter in the universe. (Proven Fact. Source 1, 2, 3) To explain what I mean here is a prefect analogy Bohm uses when explaining what is basically the same concept.
This analogy is from "Wholeness and the Implicate Order" by David Bohm. He is one of the major contributors to Holographic Principle right? The more I learn, the more it makes sense. The universe is like a black hole. I am convinced. Are you? What did you get out of Bohm's analogy. Any other good reading about Universal Universes? ha
A crystal cooled to absolute zero will allow a stream of electrons to pass through it with-out scattering them. If the temperature is raised, various flaws in the crystal will lose their transparency, so to speak, and begin to sc0atter electrons. From an electron's point of view such flaws would appear as pieces of "matter" floating in a sea of nothingness,but this is not really the case. The nothingness and the pietces of matter do not exist independently from one another. They are both part of the same fabric, the deeper order of the crystal.
This analogy is from "Wholeness and the Implicate Order" by David Bohm. He is one of the major contributors to Holographic Principle right? The more I learn, the more it makes sense. The universe is like a black hole. I am convinced. Are you? What did you get out of Bohm's analogy. Any other good reading about Universal Universes? ha
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